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Blind,
Wheelchair-Bound Student Doesn't Fail to Inspire Patrick Henry Hughes Plays the Piano, Is a Member of the Band -- And
Doesn't See His Physical Shortcomings By Erin Hayes When I met 18-year old Patrick
Henry Hughes, I knew he was musically talented. I had been told so, had read
that he was very able for someone his age and who had been blind and crippled
since birth. Patrick's eyes
are not functional; his body and legs are stunted. He is in a wheelchair.
When we first shook hands, his fingers seemed entirely too thick to be
nimble. So when he offered to play the piano for me and his father rolled his
wheelchair up to the baby grand, I confess that I thought to myself, "Well,
this will be sweet. He has overcome so much. How nice that he can play
piano." The original
plan, I thought, would be this: We were going to talk a bit as he played.
That was the plan. Hughes would explain how he managed to navigate the
keyboard and how he first learned the piano and what his favorite songs were.
But then
Patrick put his hands to the keyboard, and his fingers began to race across
it -- the entire span of it, his fingers moving up and back and over and
across the keys so quickly and intricately that my fully-functional eyesight
couldn't keep up with them. I was stunned. The music his
hands drew from that piano was so lovely and lyrical and haunting, so rich
and complex and beyond anything I had imagined he would play that there was
nothing I could say. All I could do was listen. That is the
power of Patrick Henry Hughes. He quietly makes you listen. 'God Made Me
Blind -- Big Deal' "I mean,
God made me blind and didn't give me the ability to walk. I mean, big
deal." Patrick said, smiling. "He gave me the talent to play piano
and trumpet and all that good stuff." This is
Patrick's philosophy in life, and he wants people to know it. He isn't fazed
by what many of us would consider insurmountable obstacles. "I'm the
kind of person that's always going to fight till I win," he said.
"That's my main objective. I'm gonna fight till I win." Patrick also
attends the University of Louisville and plays trumpet in the marching band.
The band director suggested it, and Patrick and his father, Patrick John
Hughes, who have faced tougher challenges together, decided "Why
not?" "That's
right," the younger Patrick said. "Don't
tell us we can't do something," Patrick's father added, with a chuckle.
He looks at Patrick with a mixture of love and loyalty and admiration,
something not always seen. in the eyes of a father when he gazes at his son. "I've told
him before. He's my hero," the elder Hughes said. Father and
Son Together at Band Practice Patrick's
father attends every practice and every game with him, and learns all the
routines. It's fascinating to watch them together, with Patrick focused on
his trumpet's notes, swaying with the rest of the band in time with the
music, and his father focused on being his son's eyes and legs. And this is no
sit-still-in-the-wheelchair-while-the-band-marches-around-you routine:
Patrick and his father are right in the thick of it, with the wheelchair
sprinting and spinning in formation and Patrick hanging on and playing his
heart out. Patrick says
the other students in the band have been great to them. "The
students always help out Dad because sometimes he might get out of
step," he explained impishly. Patrick's
father grins and nods. He concedes that navigating a wheelchair across the
thick grass of a football field, in formation, sometimes at top speed, offers
many exciting challenges for a man old enough to be the father of a college
student. Fortunately, fellow band members are eager and willing to point him
in the right direction. "The
biggest problem is sometimes when I'm backing up with Patrick, I can't stop
quick enough." he said. "I'll have a horn player behind me, and
they've gotten smart enough now that, rather than running into their horn,
they put their hand up." Blindness as
a Gift and a Blessing Some parents
might see some bigger problems in all of this. For example, Patrick's father
works an overnight shift at a shipping company and gets four or five hours of
sleep so he can attend Patrick's classes and band practices with him all day.
Patrick's
mother, Patricia Hughes, works full-time to supplement their income. She also
takes care of the household, Patrick's medical needs, and siblings, and
handles the concerns of every parent of a disabled child who looks down the
road and wonders how it could possibly work out. That's just not
how the Hughes family looks at things. Patrick taught them to see it all
differently, his father says. "Back then
he was born it was, 'Why us? What did we do that this happened to us?'"
he said. "And we ask the same question nowadays, but we put it in a
whole new light. You know, 'What did we do to deserve such a special young
man, who's brought us so, so much." Patrick John
Hughes' gaze drifted again to his son, and both their faces lit up with
smiles. "He sees
the world in a way that we can't even imagine," the father said. Just listen to
young Patrick and you know what his father means. "I've
always felt that my talent has really been a gift from God," he said. Patrick
includes his blindness, by the way, in the list of gifts. "That's
one of the great benefits I've found of being blind. I don't see the skin
color, I don't see the hair length, I don't see the eye shape, I just see
what's inside the person," he said. Actually,
Patrick said, blindness more than a gift to him. "I would
have to say a blessing, because overall, it's shown me a complete
world." That's how
young Patrick Henry Hughes sees the world. "He has so much more to teach me," his father said. "And I think to myself: I see just what you mean. He's taught me so much already. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright ©
2009 ABC News Internet Ventures To learn
more about Patrick, go to his website at: http://www.patrickhenryhughes.com/ Click here: to buy Patrick’s book I AM POTENTIAL by Patrick Henry Hughes with Patrick John Hughes and Bryant Stamford
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